Gold Member

President John Magufuli has urged the government to better control mineral exports from the country.

Magufuli is intent on regulating his country's mining sector, which has faced allegations of fraud and underreporting of production and profits.

In 2017, a govt commission said fraud in the mining sector had cost Tanzania $84 billion over 19 years and blamed foreign companies for failing to declare revenues.

Tanzanian President John Magufuli on Wednesday ordered the central bank to create a gold reserve, as he urged the government to better control mineral exports from the country, Africa's fourth largest gold producer.

"We should start buying gold, the central bank must invest in this. We must have our reserves in dollars but also our reserves in gold, because gold is money," Magufuli said at a ceremony in Dar es Salaam.

Magufuli is intent on regulating his country's mining sector, which has faced allegations of fraud and underreporting of production and profits, and has locked horns with foreign mining companies.

"There are still many problems in the mining sector," he said.

"For example, according to recent reports, Tanzania is not the biggest gold exporter in east Africa, even though we know we are the biggest gold producers in the region," he said, without naming the report or the country topping Tanzania.

"We are not profiting from our gold as we should," he added.

Magufuli said that mineral smugglers considered Tanzania to be "an immense country brimming with minerals, with gold, with everything, but a territory of people who are asleep."

In a bid to crackdown on mineral smuggling, Magufuli last year inaugurated a 24-kilometre wall around the country's tanzanite mines, a violet-blue stone unique to the country.

In 2017, a government commission said fraud in the mining sector had cost Tanzania $84 billion over 19 years and blamed foreign companies for failing to declare revenues.

Also that year, the country slapped a bill of $190 billion in unpaid taxes and interest on Acacia Mining, a subsidiary of Canadian mining giant Barrick Gold, and negotiations are still ongoing to resolve the dispute.

America...Love it...or GTFO

I think Sinclair did right by the Tanzanian government and the Tanzanian people. His deal with them (giving them a royalty fee far in excess of the then "norm") was honorable and demonstrated tremendous respect for the host country and the dignity of the people there. No one can say that Sinclair took advantage of them in any way - because he didnt.

Ignorant people don't understand The Federalist Papers, but they understand government checks with their names on them.” -- Joseph Sobran